Mon, May 28, 2012, 8:34 PM EDT - U.S. Markets closed for Memorial Day

Tax cut survives: Congress votes holiday approval

An early package under the tree: Payroll tax cut, jobless benefits extension pass Congress

RELATED QUOTES

SymbolPriceChange
FNMA.OB0.272-0.00

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Barely beating Santa's sleigh, Congress delivered a last-minute holiday tax-cut extension to 160 million American wage-earners on Friday, just when it looked like they and millions of unemployed workers were going to be left with coal in their stockings.

It was a major yearend political victory for President Barack Obama, a big slice of humble pie for House Republicans and a blow to House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, who'll have an angry band of tea party lawmakers to deal with when Congress returns to Washington next month.

Back-to-back voice vote approvals of the two-month special measure by the Senate and House came in mere seconds with no debate, just days after House Republican leaders had insisted that reopening negotiations on a full-year bill was the only way to persuade them to prevent a tax increase on Jan. 1.

Obama immediately signed the bill into law.

"I said it was critical for Congress not to go home without preventing a tax increase on 160 million working Americans and I'm pleased to say that they got it done," a buoyant looking Obama said at the White House before dashing off for his delayed holiday vacation to his home state of Hawaii.

Actually most lawmakers were long gone. A token few showed up to make approval official.

The legislation buys time for talks early next year on how to finance the year-long extensions — negotiations that promise to be contentious, especially if Democrats continue to use Obama's jobs agenda to seek a political edge in the 2012 presidential and congressional campaigns.

The measure will keep in place a 2 percentage point cut in the Social Security payroll tax — worth about $20 a week for a typical worker making $50,000 a year — and prevent almost 2 million unemployed people from losing jobless benefits averaging $300 a week. Doctors will win a reprieve from a 27 percent cut in their Medicare payments, the product of a 1997 cut that Congress has been unable to permanently fix.

Republicans did claim a major victory, winning a provision that would require Obama to make a swift decision on whether to approve construction of the Canada-to-Texas Keystone XL oil pipeline, which could generate thousands of construction jobs. To stop construction, Obama, who had wanted to put the decision off until after the 2012 election, would have to declare it was not in the nation's interest.

On Friday, an expressionless Boehner read from a piece of paper before him, gaveled the House's last session of the year closed and stepped off the podium on the Democratic side.

Boehner had been open to the Senate's version of the legislation a week ago, even though it would have punted the issue into February and given Democrats a proven political issue. But tea party forces and some in his own leadership revolted, insisting on picking a holiday fight with Democrats, and Boehner felt no choice but to go along.

The battle turned out to be a loser for House Republicans, earning the ire of swing voters and many in the GOP establishment, but when Boehner capitulated on Thursday he then felt the lash from hard-core conservatives.

"Even though there is plenty of evidence this is a bad deal for America ... the House has caved yet again to the president and Senate Democrats," said Rep. Tim Huelskamp, R-Kan.

Meanwhile, Democratic Senate leader Harry Reid of Nevada did a victory lap, twisting the knife into tea party Republicans.

"I hope this Congress has had a very good learning experience, especially those who are newer to this body," Reid said. "Everything we do around here does not have to wind up in a fight."

A full-year extension of the tax cut had been embraced by virtually every lawmaker in both the House and Senate but had been derailed in a quarrel over demands by House Republicans. Senate leaders of both parties had tried to barter their own yearlong agreement a week ago but failed, instead agreeing upon a 60-day measure to buy time for talks next year.

House GOP arguments about the legislative process and what the "uncertainty" of a two-month extension would mean for businesses seemed lame to many people when compared to the consequences of raising taxes and cutting off jobless benefits in the middle of the holiday season, and Obama and the Democrats were hard on the offensive. House Republicans finally resorted to a technical fix and the fact that Reid would name negotiators on the GOP's yearlong measure as reasons to reverse course and embrace the Senate measure.

Friday's House and Senate sessions were remarkable. Both chambers had essentially recessed for the year, but leaders in both parties orchestrated passage of the short-term agreement under debate rules that would allow any individual member of Congress to derail the pact, at least for a time. None did.

The developments were a clear win for Obama. The payroll tax cut was the centerpiece of his three-month, campaign-style drive for jobs legislation that seems to have contributed to an uptick in his poll numbers — and taken a toll on those of congressional Republicans.

The two-month version's $33 billion cost will be covered by a 0.1 percentage point increase on guarantee fees on new home loans backed by mortgage giants Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae — at a likely cost of about $17 a month for a homeowner with a $200,000 mortgage.

The top Senate Republican, Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, was a driving force behind the final agreement, imploring Boehner to accept the deal that McConnell and Reid had struck last week and passed with overwhelming support in both parties.

Even though GOP leaders including House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., promised that the two sides could quickly iron out their differences, the truth is that it will take intense talks to figure out both the spending cuts and fee increases required to finance the longer measure.

Republicans want to shorten the maximum length of unemployment benefits from 99 to 79 weeks, freeze the pay of federal civilian workers and make federal workers contribute more into their pensions — all ideas considered by the failed debt "supercommittee" this fall. The main provisions of the yearlong House measure cost about $200 billion, and the final version could cost more.

Reid signaled a hard line for the House-Senate talks by assigning Sen. Ben Cardin, D-Md. — a strong advocate for federal workers — to the Democratic negotiating team.

 
  • Boops  •  Metamora, Illinois  •  5 months ago
    Isn't it amazing how efficient our Congress and Senate become when it affects THEIR lives...how nice they will make it home for the holidays after all the weeks of bickering...great timing, you pathetic men!!!!
    • Barry Seotero 5 months ago
      AND WOMEN AND OTHERS
    • bo 5 months ago
      Particularly the others.
    • Earthman 5 months ago
      You did not mention Obama who is suppose to be the executive branch of government that leads Congress. Obama is a complete failure. No Obama 2012.
  • Common Sense  •  Jackson, Mississippi  •  5 months ago
    Wouldn't it be a wonderful Christmas present if you could fire every politician in Washington?
    • Anon 5 months ago
      only if you include the Oblamer
    • Earthman 5 months ago
      We the people only have to rid Washington, D.C. of Obama. No Obama 2012.
    • Jim 5 months ago
      It would explain why they extended unemployment.
  • CHRIS  •  Flint, Michigan  •  5 months ago
    LETS BRING CIRC DE SOLE TO WASHINGINTON.. THEY WOULD BE MORE ENTERTAINING THAN THIS CLOWN SHOW...
    • A Yahoo! User 5 months ago
      very good
  • Underground  •  5 months ago
    If I ran my household like those in Washington I would be filing for bankruptcy! I think those in power need to balance their checkbook instead of hiring a law firm to do so. I doubt that the member's of congress can add past their fingers and toes....From what I see they can't....
  • james  •  5 months ago
    Tax cut survives.....Country still drowning.......
    • bo 5 months ago
      Oh but the government is always ready to help - by tossing you an anchor.
    • Jack Ace 5 months ago
      Raise taxes!
    • 11_TITLES 5 months ago
      Jack Ace....Send in your check for extra taxes first. #$%$
  • Kommon Cents  •  5 months ago
    The President and Congress are clueless and have once more kick the can down the road. The good news is they only kicked it for 66 days before the latest band-aid falls off the tax wound. The bad news is that Washington will then waste another 2 months trying to replace that band-aid. The idiots that voters send to Washington have known for over 2 years that what is needed is a major reform of the 20 volumes, with 13,000 pages, of tax code. Yet they still dither with a tweak on the temporary rate for Title 26 Subtitle C Chapter 21 Sub-Chapter A Section §3101 (a). And they will waste more time on this when they should be reforming thousands of sections of the code. At the rate this Congress works, it would be in the year 5085 before they accomplish any major tax reform.
  • Harley Dude  •  5 months ago
    Borrow money from China to give Americans more money to buy Chinese products. Brilliant!
    • Jim 5 months ago
      The Chinese products are crap, but we'll never pay back the money. All seems to balance out in the end.
  • Megameat  •  Washington, District of Columbia  •  5 months ago
    "Christmas is a time when kids tell Santa what they want and adults pay for it. Deficits are when adults tell the government what they want -- and their kids pay for it." --Richard Lamm
  • chad s  •  5 months ago
    Our media outlets blow, this article excludes so many important deattails its laughable, where did all the real reporters go...
  • selfemployedtaxpayer  •  Victoria, Texas  •  5 months ago
    This is NOT a tax cut! It's cutting the source of funding for social security and increasing the country's deficit. Ask the folks that get a "payroll tax holiday" if they also want lower social security benefits.
  • Scott  •  5 months ago
    More than 2 YEARS on unemployment? Why move? Why retrain? Why get up from in front of the TV? Just sponge off the taxpayers.
  • BB  •  Moscow, Idaho  •  5 months ago
    "The two-month version's $33 billion cost will be covered by a 0.1 percentage point increase on guarantee fees on new home loans at a likely cost of about $17 a month for a homeowner with a $200,000 mortgage."

    HUH? So the big tax cut of $20 a paycheck FOR TWO MONTHS will be offset by a $17 increase in a mortgage for 30 YEARS!. We save $80 in taxes but spend $6120 extra over the life of a mortgage? ARE YOU EFFING KIDDING ME?
  • 401K Fan  •  Tucker, Georgia  •  5 months ago
    This is such sad news for SS.
  • NWCubbyBear  •  Everett, Washington  •  5 months ago
    An 2 month extension huh? In the real world, these guys would be fired and walked out the door, not going on $4 Million dollar vacations right now. We need to begin impeachment and recall efforts for all current incumbents. We don't need to wait for another election year for this. This administration (Republicans and Democrats) is completely disconnected from reality. There must be a lot of fiddles playing amongst the ashes in Washington, DC.
  • Brian  •  Youngstown, Ohio  •  5 months ago
    Through out all these a---hole politicians, there all a bunch of crooks feeding off the American taxpayer backs.
  • Midleton  •  St Louis, Missouri  •  5 months ago
    There is nothing to be proud of here... Failure of leadership. Failure of institutions. Failure of media. Someone correctly report this story.

    "President Obama signed into law a bill approved by Congress that will tax hardworking Americans' that purchase home mortgages to pay for those that still can't find work. All of this was done under the cover of a "tax cut." However, the tax cut reduced the amount available to fund the nearly insolvent Social Security Trust Fund. Some media outlets are reporting this as a "success for the President."
  • William  •  Basin, Wyoming  •  5 months ago
    That's the plan. Keep giving away money we don't have until it all goes KABOOM and we are eating out of dumpsters.
  • A Yahoo! User  •  Bend, Oregon  •  5 months ago
    Why is no one talking about the underlying lunacy of the program in the first place? The 2% temporary cut is off your Social Security - the most upside down program the government has. Cutting further incoming funds by 2% gets us...what? You'll pay later, believe me, assuming there is any kind of program left in the future. God forbid these clowns give the people a 2% break off the general Federal withholding and reduce their spending.
  • paul  •  Hillsboro, Oregon  •  5 months ago
    Better to create family wage jobs.
  • tim s  •  Columbus, Georgia  •  5 months ago
    and just where are we getting the revenue to pay for this?????????????? lets go further in debt and we will soon be another Greece
 
Recent Quotes
Symbol Price Change % Chg 
Your most recently viewed tickers will automatically show up here if you type a ticker in the "Enter symbol/company" at the bottom of this module.
You need to enable your browser cookies to view your most recent quotes.
 
Sign-in to view quotes in your portfolios.

Trading Center

Yahoo! Finance on Facebook

  YAHOO! FINANCE ON TWITTER